The relative importance of global agricultural subsidies and market access
Loading...
Date
Authors
Anderson, Kym
Martin, Will
Valenzuela, Ernesto
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Abstract
The claim by trade modelers that the potential contribution to
global economic welfare of removing agricultural subsidies is less than one-tenth
of that from removing agricultural tariffs puzzles many observers. To help
explain that result, this paper first compares the OECD and model-based
estimates of the extent of the producer distortions (leaving aside consumer
distortions), and shows that 75% of total support is provided by market access
barriers when account is taken of all forms of support to farmers and to
agricultural processors globally, and only 19% to domestic farm subsidies. We
then provide a back-of-the-envelope (BOTE) calculation of the welfare cost of
those distortions. Assuming unitary supply and demand elasticities, that BOTE
analysis suggests 86% of the welfare cost is due to tariffs and only 6% to
domestic farm subsidies. When the higher costs associated with the greater
variability of trade measures relative to domestic support are accounted for, the
BOTE estimate of the latter’s share falls to 4%. This is close to the 5% generated
by the most commonly used global model (GTAP) and reported in the paper’s
final section.
Description
Keywords
Citation
Collections
Source
World Trade Review